Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
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A biweekly look at people behind
issues in the Klamath Basin
Fighting drought is
Hollie Cannon’s No. 1 goal
by
JOEL ASCHBRENNER, Herald and News 6/8/12
H&N photo by Joel Aschbrenner
Hollie Cannon is the executive director
of the Klamath Water and
Power Agency.
In its first four years,
the agency has dealt with two droughts and has begun
developing a plan for how to divvy up water under the
Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement, said Cannon, KWAPA’s
executive director.
The KBRA and a related
water settlement aim to remove four Klamath River dams,
provide reliable water supplies and affordable power for
irrigators, restore fish habitat, and acquire a 92,000-acre
tree farm for the Klamath Tribes.
A Lakeview native,
Cannon graduated from the Oregon Institute of Technology and
spent 16 years managing irrigation districts in Lakeview and
the Rogue Valley. He ran his own water rights consulting
firm for nine years before joining KWAPA.
Cannon took time this
week to answer questions about the agency and Klamath Basin
agriculture.
How has it been
preparing for this irrigation season?
“It’s been very trying
this year because basically from mid-February on, every two
weeks there has been a change,” in the water forecast,
Cannon said.
The winter started dry,
with basically no precipitation from Thanksgiving to
Christmas, and left irrigators preparing for a severe
drought.
March brought heavy
precipitation and hope for irrigators. It looked like the
season could be saved, Cannon said.
Warm weather in late
April and May renewed irrigators’ concerns, as melting
snowpack rushed off the mountains. Upper Klamath Lake
couldn’t hold it all and valuable water had to be released
down river.
This week’s rain and
What is your top
priority?
Cannon said his No. 1
priority is implementing programs to help mitigate a drought
this summer.
One program would pay
irrigators to pump 40,000 acre-feet of groundwater in an
effort to spare surface water for those who don’t have
wells. The other would pay grain and forage farmers to give
up water later in the growing season to spare water for
those who grow row crops that require more water, like
potatoes, onions and horseradish.
Both programs are funded
by the Bureau of Reclamation.
Cannon’s second priority
is developing the On-Project Plan, a program that spells out
how Klamath Reclamation Project irrigators will share water
under the Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement.
What is the
biggest concern for local irrigators?
“The most serious threat
to agriculture is the cost of power,” Cannon said.
A 50-year agreement that
gave irrigators a historically low power rate expired in
2006. Power rates have been rising since and will increase
50 percent before next April, when the rate will reach
tariff, the standard power rate, Cannon said.
At the tariff rate,
irrigators will pay nearly 20 times more for power than
before 2006, he said.
The KBRA aims to secure
more affordable power, primarily from the Bonneville Power
Administration, Cannon said.
What changes could be in
store for agriculture on the Project?
The future of the
Project hinges largely on power rates, Cannon said.
If irrigators cannot
secure affordable power, many could revert to flood
irrigating, which requires less power but uses more water
than sprinkler irrigation. And if that happens, there will
be less water to go around and fewer irrigators will remain
on the Project, he said.
If the KBRA is
implemented, what will change for on- Project irrigators?
“If we are successful
with the On-Project Plan, there will be hardly any change
for the on-Project farmer,” Cannon said.
Under the KBRA, less
water will be allocated to the Project, compared to the
wettest years now, but irrigators will have the choice to
participate in programs that pay them to conserve water. The
programs could include groundwater pumping, water storage,
conservation and efficiency and water demand management,
Cannon said.
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